Lesbian Minister Defrocked by Methodist Court
Reuters.com
By Jon Hurdle
PUGHTOWN, Pennsylvania (Reuters) - A lesbian Methodist minister was defrocked on Thursday after being found guilty by an ecclesiastical court of violating a church law that bars its clergy from being practicing homosexuals.
A jury of 13 clergy from the United Methodist Church voted
12-1 that Irene Elizabeth Stroud had violated the church's Book of Discipline that says homosexuality is incompatible with being a minister. The jury then voted
7-6 to withdraw Stroud's ministerial credentials at the First United Methodist Church of Germantown in Philadelphia.
The decision came after a two-day public trial -- only the third in the history of the United Methodist Church -- in which Stroud, associate pastor at the church, was accused of violating church law by being an "a self-avowed practicing homosexual."
After the court's decision, Stroud said the close decision of the jury on the penalty showed how divided the church was on the issue of homosexuality.
"I feel a lot of sadness but I also feel hope for the future of the church," Stroud said. "I feel that this is a teaching moment for the church."
During an April, 2003 sermon, Stroud told her congregation that she was living in a committed relationship with another woman. She declined to practice celibacy or transfer to another, more tolerant denomination, and decided to be open about her sexuality.
After the announcement, Stroud's supporters from the Germantown church, some in tears, joined hands in the gymnasium where the trial was held and repeatedly sang a song that included the words "We are gay and straight together."
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Rev. Fred Day, senior pastor at Stroud's church, spoke of his "deep disappointment" at the verdict.
"This is not the United Methodist Church of our just heritage," he said.
Stroud can continue working at the church as a lay person but will not be able to perform ceremonies such as baptisms and weddings. She has 30 days to decide whether to appeal.
During his testimony, Rev. Day said that convicting Stroud because of her sexuality would be as discriminatory as making a judgment on the basis of color, ethnicity or economic status.
Day praised Stroud, 34, as an outstanding pastor and a person of "great spiritual integrity" who moves and inspires her congregation. "She cannot get through a baptism without us having to pause for a crying jag," Day told the court.
Questioned by church counsel Thomas Hall about whether it was acceptable for a minister to violate the discipline of the church, Day said, "The answer is clearly 'yes'."
"It is my belief that United Methodist discipline isn't clear on this subject," Day said, citing a church regulation stating homosexuals are of equal worth to people of other orientations. "How much worth do homosexuals have if they are not allowed to rise to positions of leadership?"
In his closing statement, Williams appealed to the jury to see the rights of all members of the church as equal.
Hall argued on behalf of the church that the denomination's Book of Discipline banned openly homosexual clergy, and told the jury that members of the church could not "negate" the regulations even if they object to them.
The United Methodist Church says on its Web site that it has some 8.25 million lay members and nearly 45,000 clergy in more than 35,000 local U.S. churches. It also has another 1.86 million members in 12 foreign countries.